Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Jetico BCWipe 6

BCWipe software enables you to confidently erase files that can
never be recovered by an intruder. BCWipe embeds itself in Windows and
can be activated from the Explorer FILE Menu OR from the context (right
click) menu OR from a command-line prompt. BCWipe v.3 is a powerful set
of utilities which complies with options to invoke either the US
Department of Defense (DoD) standard or the Peter Gutmann wiping scheme.
You can also create and use your own customized wiping scheme to wipe
sensitive information from storage devices installed on your computer.

BCWipe features

BCWipe software provides the following main commands and options:

-
Delete with wiping. Using this command available in the context menus
of the ‘My computer’ window, you can delete and wipe a file or a folder,
or a group of files and folders.

- Wipe free disk space. Using
this command available in the context menus of the ‘My computer’ window,
you can completely remove all traces of previously deleted files.

-
Wipe Swap File. The Swap File is a Windows system file that is used for
virtual memory support. If you are working on a file or document (even
one that has been encrypted by a powerful engine), Windows can copy all
or part of it in an open unencrypted form to the Swap file on your hard
disk. Encryption keys, passwords, and other sensitive information can
also be ‘swapped’ to your hard drive. Even if you use all the security
features in the latest versions of Windows, simply investigating the
Swap file in DOS mode with readily available tools may allow for
significant data retrieval. BCWipe offers the option to wipe unused
portions of the Swap File.

- Wipe Empty Directory Entries. The
file system records the names and attributes of files to a special area
(so called ‘directory entries’ for FAT and MFT for NTFS). When a file is
deleted the corresponding directory entry is modified by the file
system, which makes it invisible to windows and you. But most of the
information still exists and the name and attributes can be restored
using any recovery utility. BCWipe shreds directory entries and MFT so
that the information can never be recovered.

- Wipe File Slacks. A
file slack is the disk space from the end of a file up to end of the
last cluster used by that file. You can turn file slacks wiping on or
off before running BCWipe commands. (Read more explanations on file
slacks at the Tips & Tricks section.)